According to some Roman Catholics, limbo is the temporary status of the souls of good persons who died before the resurrection of Jesus (the Limbo of the Fathers), and the permanent status of the unbaptized who die in infancy, without having committed any personal sins, but without having been freed from original sin (the Limbo of Children).
Limbo comes from the latin limbus meaning a hem or an edge or a boundary. While "limbo" is often popularly understood to be a "place where souls go", the term also describes and reflects theological uncertainty. As such, the limbo of children is not part of the Catholic religion's official doctrine (compare purgatory, which is a part of Roman Catholic doctrine). Official Church teaching remains that the status of these souls (who don't seem to deserve hell, yet cannot follow the divinely-revealed path to heaven) is in limbo — in other words, their fate cannot be determined by any but God.
Some have pointed out that he is also described as preaching to "the spirits in prison" (1 Pet 3:19). Medieval drama sometimes portrayed Christ leading a dramatic assault — The Harrowing of Hell — during the three days between the Crucifixion and the resurrection; this assault was presented as freeing the souls of the just, and escorting them triumphantly into heaven. This imagery is still used in the Eastern Orthodox Church's Holy Saturday liturgy (between Good Friday and Pascha).
The foundational importance of the sacrament of baptism (either the ritual baptism by water or the personal baptism by desire) or baptism by blood in Roman Catholic theology gives rise to the argument that the unbaptized are not eligible for entry into heaven, because the original sin of human nature precludes the unbaptized from the pure beatific vision enjoyed by the souls in paradise.
Since infants are incapable of either professing their faith or performing acts of Christian charity, babies rely upon their parents (or other caregivers) to bring them up in the faith. If, for whatever reason, an infant dies unbaptized (see infant baptism), many eminent theologians have argued that a merciful and just God would not condemn infants to the torments of hell.
The existence of the Limbo of Children is highly doubted by more liberal Catholics. Pope John Paul II, in his encyclical letter Evangelium Vitae (The Gospel of Life), touched on the issue when speaking about the "victims of abortion." He said that the church does not know the fate of unbaptized infants, but advised Roman Catholics to trust in God's mercy and love. Most Traditional Catholics, though, believe in its existence.
No Protestant denominations accept the concept of limbo.
These same speculations often extend to encompass God's salvific plans for the mentally handicapped, children younger than the age of reason, and the unborn. Roman Catholic theologians have also speculated that a just and merciful God may, in some way incomprehensible to human minds, give these souls the chance to accept or reject God's grace, and thereby earn themselves a place in heaven or hell, though this is not considered nearly as likely as the former view of limbo.
A "legal limbo" may occur when varying laws or court rulings leave a person without recourse. For example, a person may earn "too much" to receive public assistance from the government, but not enough to actually pay for basic necessities. Likewise, various parties in a dispute may be pointing blame at each other, rather than fixing the problem, and leaving the person or group suffering from the problem to continue to suffer in limbo.
The Amstrad PCW used the term "in limbo" to refer to files which had been deleted but which could still be restored, a concept similar to that later implemented by the Recycle bin in Microsoft Windows.
CCC #1261 states:
As regards children who have died without baptism, the Church can only entrust them to the mercy of God, as she does in her funeral rites for them. Indeed, the great mercy of God, who desires that all men should be saved, and Jesus' tenderness toward children, which caused him to say, 'Let the children come to me, do not hinder them' 10:14, cf. 1 Tim. 2:4, allow us to hope that there is a way of salvation for children who have died without baptism. All the more urgent is the Church's call not to prevent little children coming to Christ through the gift of holy baptism.
The International Theological Commission was asked by Pope John Paul II to consider the question of the fate of unbaptized babies. Under Pope Benedict XVI, the Commission recommended that the theological hypothesis of Limbo be replaced by the more “compassionate” doctrine that all children who die do so “in the hope of eternal salvation”. A Catholic News Service article quotes Redemptorist Father Tony Kelly, an Australian member of the commission, as saying that turning away from the idea of limbo was part of "the development of the theological virtue of hope" and reflected "a different sense of God, focusing on his infinite love."
Christian eschatology | Christian theology | Life after death
Limbus | Limbus (Theologie) | Limbo de los niños | לימבו | Voorgeborchte | Limbo | Limbo (religião) | Limbo (religion) | 靈薄獄
Limbo is the form of dance where people arch their back backwards and go under a pole held on both sides, heads being the last thing to go under. The pole is lowered each time. Probably of West Indian origin